 My name is Ruth Greenspan Bell. I'm a public policy scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, DC. Environmental laws are actually a way of trying to create a balance between development and nature. For some countries, these may be very new concepts, environmental laws. They still may be developing their laws at the same time that they have to deal with industry coming in wanting to do business. How do they get the best deal not only in terms of the resources they get, the revenues they get, how people live in that country, and what the quality of life is. Once you start doing the extraction, you are messing around with a bunch of natural systems. Availability of water, we're talking about how people grow food to sustain their lives. And the environmental controls that are put in all these contracts are really about those issues. So to treat them just like, OK, we've done that. We can move on. It isn't really giving full justice to what's involved. The really bigger issue we're facing right now is, should we be extracting that stuff at all because of the use it's put to? Some bigger brain than mine is going to have to come along and figure out how we keep that stuff in the ground and don't disadvantage the countries involved. The countries involved frequently are pretty poor and they need the resources. And to me, that's the biggest issue we have to address. And we have to address it quickly.